telehealth 102 - maximizing clinical effectiveness...workshop materials & setup two projected...
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TELEHEALTH 102 - Maximizing Clinical Effectiveness
Image Quality & Etiquette in Live Video
Workshop Materials & Setup
● Two projected screens with live Zoom meeting
○ Laptops us HDMI, connect to existing projectors
● Paperboard “frames” on tables, various sizes
● Extra laptop with Jabra speakerphone (Garret)
● Extra iPad (Garret), iPad Mini (Jessie), and cell phone (JN)
● Local network (Jordan?), or ability to tether cell hotspots
Outline
● Presentation Quality■ Technical issues and preparation
■ Sometimes subtle, but convey professionalism
● Etiquette, Training, & Evaluation■ Behaviors during a video encounter
■ Essential for effective, professional encounters
Introduction
● Presentation quality is a HUGE (but subtle) professional issue
● There is always lots to learn & ways to improve
● Interesting and fun to discuss
I. PRESENTATION QUALITY
I. PRESENTATION QUALITY
Caveats
• Variation is possible - we are presenting “ideals”
• Hardware and software matter, but here we are focusing on “the rest of it”
Screen type and size
● Live video can be displayed on a wide variety of devices○ Not limited to within an EMR or other platform○ Various form factors have strengths & weaknesses
● Exercise: Introduce yourself “through the window”○ One type of “ideal” setup - window metaphor
Camera Location and Stability
• Producing the illusion of “eye contact”a. Camera directly over faceb. Video image directly under
the camerac. Minimize the separation
“Lower the camera, raise the image”
Camera placement
Camera (ideally) should be level with the subject’s forehead.
Avoid downward glance
Avoid upward stare
[Note: backlight white balance]
Camera Location and Stability
• Stability adds to professionalisma. Exercise: Calling in by phone & iPad
Lighting
● Standard workplace lighting is often “good enough”● General principle: bright, blurry, & not behind● Things to avoid
○ Harsh light - reflections○ Unbalanced light - shadows○ “Point” sources - lamps○ Backlighting○ Subject near a bright/reflective back wall
Lighting (examples)
Back lighting Side lighting
Framing & Background
• Fill the frame to the top
• Include your hands
• Avoid intrusive backgrounds
• Avoid backlighting
Framing & Background
Privacy & Security
Secure office location, but the glass behind the user creates privacy a concern
Work area has insufficient privacyallowing co-workers to unintentionallyintrude
Room Walls & Backgrounds
• Flat colors (unreflective)• Neutral tones• Avoid patterns & lines
[Story: Altru “telemedicine” color palette]
Room Colors (and Lighting)
• Room walls change the color of reflected light
• Choose neutral or muted colors
• “Daylight” colored lights
Sound
Reverberation
Proximity
Sensitivity
Directionality
Sound
Reverberation - Room echo (“softer” walls and furniture reduce reverb)
Proximity - The closer the mic is to the sound, the better the quality
Sensitivity - Signal (volume) reduces with the distance squared
Directionality - High frequencies (necessary for intelligibility) come straight out of the mouth, but spread fairly rapidly
Sound
• Lots of mic styles available
• Feedback - when two ends of the call can hear each other
• Echo - usually the one with the problem can’t hear it
Sound
• Pro Tip:
“MTDM”
Handling Peripherals
• Stand behind/to the side of the patient
• Address the camera
• Practice
Other “Pro Tips”
• Secondary communication plan (backup “hotline”) - if presenter leaves the room or the call breaks down
• Know your equipment and placement of cameras and microphones. ◼ Software and hardware upgrades tend to change things
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II. ETIQUETTE, TRAINING, & EVALUATION
II. ETIQUETTE, TRAINING, & EVALUATION
II. ETIQUETTE, TRAINING, & EVALUATION
II. ETIQUETTE, TRAINING, & EVALUATION
Training and Competencies
• Consider how much and what kind of training operators need
• Consider including information about image quality
• Continuously monitor and improve your image
Training and Competencies
● Telemedicine procedures should mirror “normal” procedures
○ Telemedicine is a mode of delivery, NOT a special treatment or different service
○ Adapt usual procedures as much as possible, or include telemedicine points in usual procedures
● Train everyone thoroughly, but...
avoid making telehealth something “special”, risky, or difficult
Best Practices
Familiarization, normalization, and practice• Everyone should be comfortable using the equipment
• Using live video in other situations helps normalize it
• PRACTICE - use mock encounters to learn BEFORE it matters
• If a hesitant provider (or patient) has one bad encounter, they will need 10 good encounters to trust the technology again
Best Practices
Building Rapport• Talk normally• Look at the patient (whose face is near the camera)• Use gestures (your hands are on screen)• “Talk to the person, not the screen.”
Best Practices
Building Rapport• Monitor your self-view (but don’t obsess about it)
Universal Video Etiquette
• Everybody in the room is on screen
(or at least comes on to be introduced)
• Everybody is identified by name and role
• Patient consent is obtained
• Alternatives are understood
• No recording without explicit consent
Other Dos & Don’ts
Evaluation
Making sure your presenters are conducting effective, high quality encounters.
Using a Checklist
Telepresenter Competency Checklist (gpTRAC)
General Session Checklist
❏ Have equipment ready beforehand
❏ Introduce all participants (name/role)
❏ Orient and answer questions
❏ Say: “Video sessions are never recorded without permission”
❏ Discuss “call dropped” procedure
❏ Place and monitor your self-view
❏ Speak clearly and normally
❏ Engage the patient with eye contact and gestures
❏ Structure the encounter effectively
❏ Give a clear “end” to the encounter (“I’m disconnecting now”) and clear instructions for the patient on what to do next
Standardized Training Evaluation Tool
Tina Haney, PhDAssistant Professor of NursingOld Dominion University
Interprofessional Team Telehealth Performance Evaluation
Etiquette “Pro Tips”
Questions & Discussion
Garret SpargoAlaska Native Tribal Health Consortium
Mary DeVanyNebraska Medicine
Jessica MillerGundersen Health
Jonathan NeufeldGreat Plains Telehealth Resource & Assistance Center